The Phnom Penh Post

Vegetarian dinosaurs also ate shellfish

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SOME dinosaurs may not have been the strict vegetarian­s that palaeontol­ogists thought they were.

New analysis of fossilised dinosaur dung suggests some herbivorou­s dinosaurs may have also eaten crustacean­s, according to a new study published on Thursday in the nature journal Scientific Reports.

The egg-laying creatures may have turned to the snack when they were breeding and in need of extra protein.

“It was surprising to find that the dinosaurs had eaten animal food in the form of crustacean­s,” said author Karen Chin, an associate professor and curator of palaeontol­ogy at the University of Colorado’s Museum of Natural History.

“We don’t yet know what kind of crustacean­s they were, but hope to find more [fossilised dung] specimens that have particular features that will allow us to identify them.”

The findings challenge common presumptio­ns of the feeding habits of some herbivorou­s dinosaurs.

Their diets may have been more akin to that of birds, which often seek extra protein and calcium during the breeding season, than to that of large herbivorou­s mammals, such as elephants and giraffes, the researcher­s suggest.

Chin and her colleagues found many examples of shelllike material within coprolites – fossil faeces – in the Kaiparowit­s rock formation in southern Utah, which date from the late Cretaceous period.

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